Friday, 27 September 2024

Book Review: The Seachangers by Meredith Appleyard

 The Seachangers

by

Meredith Appleyard

It's never too late for a new beginning.

Publisher: Harlequin Australia
Publication date: 4th September 2024
Genre: Contemporary Fiction
Pages: 400
RRP: AU$32.99
Source: Courtesy of the publisher 
 

Review: The Seachangers

The Seachangers by Meredith Appleyard is a beautiful story about ageing, retirement and new beginnings.
 
Ruth is in her early 60's and after 5 years running Rosie's Cafe in Cutlers Bay she has become tired and worn down. She is reluctant to retire, as all her money is tied up in the cafe, but can't see herself continuing at this pace without her health being compromised.
 
Hamish, now retired, has a big flash city apartment and plenty of time to play golf but finds himself bored and lonely. When his father dies he travels to Cutlers Bay to clear out the house and sell it. Being back in the house brings back memories and regrets but he also finds a friendly atmosphere in the town he's never felt in the city.
 
The Seachangers is a clever and engaging story about life's problems and how we cope with change as we age.
 
Meredith Appleyard highlights the difficulties faced with self-employment, especially in the hospitality industry when patrons expect you to be open everyday, and the difficulty of finding reliable staff in a small town.
 
I loved that there was a romance element with an older couple. The romance evolved slowly and natural with no gushing or angst, making it very believable. 
 
The Seachangers is a wonderful contemporary fiction story that delves into the everyday questions of when to stop working, do I have enough money and what to do after retirement.
I know some of my friends are grappling with this right now.
 
My rating 5 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Book Review: The Venice Hotel by Tess Woods

 The Venice Hotel

by

Tess Woods

Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 3rd September 2024
Genre: Contemporary Fiction
Pages: 380
RRP: AU$34.99
Source: Own purchase
 

Review: The Venice Hotel

I loved the setting of The Venice Hotel! Tess Woods takes her readers on an evocative tour of Venice whilst also including the environmental concerns of the citizens with rising water levels and pollution from cruise ships.
 
The Venice Hotel is told through multiple narrations.
Sophie, a writer for a food magazine, is in Venice to interview Loretta Bianchi, owner and celebrity chef of the Hotel Il Cuore.
Loretta at 66 dedicates her whole life to the hotel and its guests and she has no plans of retiring.
Elena has returned to Venice with her Australian husband to attend her father's funeral.
Gayle and her husband have travelled from America to spend Christmas in Venice.
 
There was way too much drama in this story for me. Every character had some sort of drama going on in their life. There was lots of Christian bashing. The Christians in the story were either fire and brimstone, hypocrites or homophobic. The protagonist was even named Christian!
Maybe I'm being too sensitive but it got my ire up.
 
I did love that the women banded together to help each other and there was a little side romance story.
 
There are lots of 5 star reviews for this one but it was just an okay read for me.
 
My rating 3 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐

Saturday, 14 September 2024

Book Review: The Hidden Girl by Lucinda Riley

 The Hidden Girl

by

Lucinda Riley

with Foreword by Harry Whittaker
 
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
Publication date: 10th September 2024
Genre: Historical Fiction / Contemporary Fiction
Pages: 576
RRP: AU$34.99
Source: Courtesy of the publisher
 

Review: The Hidden Girl

I wasn't quite prepared for how dark The Hidden Girl was. I have read a few books by Lucinda Riley and I don't remember them having so much heavy content.
 
The Hidden Girl is narrated through multiple timelines and multiple characters spanning generations.
 
Present Day: Rose and David are estranged siblings however reconnect when David asks Rose to take his 16yo son for the semester break. Brett has a brief holiday romance with village girl Leah who years later will take the modelling world by storm.

The Hidden Girl is a generational saga going back to David and Rose's parents, the concentration camps of WWII and to the present day.

From Yorkshire to London to the catwalks of Milan then on to New York, the hectic and not so glamorous life of a top model is riddled with competition, obsession and sabotage.

The Hidden Girl is a big book, over 500 pages, refreshed and updated by Lucinda's son Harry Whittaker. There is also an informative foreword by Harry.

With themes of the concentration camps of WWII, murder, allusions to child abuse, sexual abuse, domestic abuse, obsession, suicide,  male dominance, servitude, gaslighting and rape. The Hidden Girl is not for the faint hearted.
 
I have to say though, the story had me glued to the pages even though I was continually shocked by the content, the twists were many and just when I thought I couldn't be shocked anymore I was hit by another twist.

My rating 3 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐
 
 

Wednesday, 11 September 2024

Book Review: Murder by Milkshake by Elizabeth Maria Naranjo

 Murder by Milkshake

by

Elizabeth Maria Naranjo

Publisher: Self Published
Publication date: 15th July 2024
Series: Sweet Dreams Mysteries #1
Genre: Cosy Crime / Mystery
Pages: 220
RRP: AU$4.44 (kindle)
Source: Courtesy of the author via WOW! Women on Writing
 

Review: Murder by Milkshake

Murder by Milkshake is the first in a cosy murder mystery series set around an ice-cream parlour.

Genevieve Winterland is our 17 year-old amateur sleuth who decides to investigate the disappearance of her favourite teacher.

I really like the relationship between Genevieve and her best friend Brandon. It shows teens that girls and boys can be friends without any romantic attachment.

Murder by Milkshake is a very sweet read and Genevieve is a likeable protagonist. I didn't know before I read it that it is a young adult read and it is perfectly suited to this age group of 12 - 18 years. Perfect for readers who like a sweet mystery with a spoonful of suspense and an extra scoop of ice-cream.

There are lots of mentions of ice-cream flavours focusing on Genevieve's work at the ice-cream parlour and how she mixes her own flavours. I would have liked some of Genevieve's secret recipes, they sounded delicious.

Light themes of following your dreams and teens as carers. A few red-herrings are included to throw the reader off the trail.

If you are after something not too taxing Murder by Milkshake is the perfect read; light and cosy it can be read in one sitting.

My rating 4 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐
Ages 12 - 18 years
 

Tuesday, 10 September 2024

Book Review: All You Took From Me by Lisa Kenway

 All You Took From Me

by

Lisa Kenway

Publisher: Transit Lounge Publishing
Publication date: 1st August 2024
Genre: Crime / Thriller
Pages: 336
RRP: AU$32.99 (paperback)
Source: Courtesy of the publisher via Quikmark Media
 

Review: All You Took From Me

All You Took From Me is a compelling debut novel from Lisa Kenway. Cleverly plotted to slowly release vital information which kept me eagerly turning the pages to find out what Clare had blocked from her memory.
 
Clare Carpenter wakes in UCI in a Sydney hospital to be told she had been in a car accident in which her husband died. She has been in a coma for months and can't remember the accident or the months leading up to it.
 
After being released from hospital and returning to her isolated Blue Mountains home Clare finds she is being stalked and someone is leaving threatening notes. Feeling she must solve the mystery behind her memory loss Claire, an anaesthetist herself, believes an anaesthetic drug may help her remember, but she will be putting her life and career in danger.
 
I quite often struggle with a first person narration and I did struggle with this one. Clare is erratic and complicated. I couldn't warm to her. But that aside, I found the story was gripping, tension filled and carried an overarching sense of menace. Clare's memories, revealed through hypnosis and anaesthetic, were vivid and suspense filled. I loved the slow reveal.
 
All You Took From Me is a powerful debut which explores the world of repressed memory. 
 
My rating 4 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Book Review: Codename Parsifal by Martin Roy Hill

 Codename Parsifal

by

Martin Roy Hill

A WWII Thriller

Publisher: 32-32 North
Publication date: 4th September 2023
Genre: Military Thriller
Pages: 221
RRP: AU$11.99 (kindle)
Source: eBook courtesy of the author
 

Review: Codename Parsifal

The Spear of Destiny. The Roman Legionnaire's lance that pierced Christ's body as he hung on the cross.
Legend claims whomever possesses it will become a great conqueror.

Martin Roy Hill has taken this legend and developed a compelling read that intricately weaves themes of betrayal, myth and WWII into the high-stakes world of special services as the Americans, Germans and Russians all race to find the legendary spear.
 
Codename Parsifal has a masterful blend of action and character development as we get to know the thoughts and actions of soldiers from each side of the war.
 
Hill skillfully portrays the psychological effect of belief as the spear is sort after for its power.
 
Set against the backdrop of the final days of WWII Hill uses vivid imagery and meticulous attention to detail to give a believable portrayal of the special services mission to find the authentic spear.
Hills expertise in crafting engaging action sequences is complemented by his ability to develop a rich, believable plot line.
 
Codename Parsifal is a thought provoking exploration of the idea of talismans, superstition and mysticism. 
 
my rating 4 / 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Saturday, 7 September 2024

Sisters in Crime’s 24th Davitt Awards winners announced!!

 
 
Debut books triumphed at Sisters in Crime’s 24th Davitt Awards for best women’s crime and mystery books held on 31 August 2024.
Four of the six winning crime and mystery books were first-time forays into the genre.

Ruth Wykes, the judges’ coordinator, said that there had been a seismic shift with debut books.

 Increasingly, debut books are polished and sophisticated. There is nothing at all amateurish about them,” she said.

 Wykes said that judging the Davitts gives you “a front-row seat to the wonderful entertainment that is Australian women’s crime stories. This year, we travelled the world through the pages of 153 books: from an isolated house in Tasmania, to a road trip to the Kakadu National Park and all the way to a posh boarding school in Switzerland; and a hundred places along the way. We met some rather colourful characters; some who made us laugh out loud, others who left us in tears. And we had moments where we were secretly rooting for the bad guy,” she said.
 
 This year’s themes seemed darker than last year. There were several stories that revolved around close family dramas, many that sadly reflected the darker, more hidden side of real-life Australia. Family violence and dysfunction, or long-buried secrets were the basis for many stories. Several authors wove their stories around mental health issues, a theme that has been taboo; deliberately avoided or watered down for many years. But this is perhaps a realistic reflection of the impact of COVID and those life-changing lockdowns we experienced in 2020. Our worlds changed, and so did the worlds of our storytellers.”

 CONGRATULATIONS TO THE WINNERS!

BEST ADULT NOVEL
 
When One of Us Hurts by Monica Vuu
Pan Macmillan Australia
 

 

Monica Vuu was born in Langley, British Columbia, and moved to Tasmania in 2019 with her Australian partner. When One of Us Hurts came out of a 90-day novel writing course and Vuu says it was inspired by the remoteness of rural Tasmania.

The judges said that it “takes courage to write a story like When One of Us Hurts and to portray a small, tight-knit community in a way that is at times familiar to readers of crime fiction, and at other times it’s uncomfortably confronting. Richly gothic at heart and fuelled by a multitude of masterful misdirects, When One of Us Hurts is a chilling foray into simmering small-town secrets, family tensions, and mental illness.” 
       
 
BEST YOUNG ADULT NOVEL
 
Eleanor Jones is Not a Murderer by Amy Doak
Penguin Random House Australia 


Eleanor Jones Is Not a Murderer, the YA-winning novel by Amy Doak, features Eleanor, the new girl at high school, who is falsely accused of stabbing another student and sets out to clear her name. The judges “all connected with Eleanor and loved her banter with the reader throughout the book. She was such a terrific character: bolshie and cynical, yet secretly vulnerable”. The sequel, Eleanor Jones Can’t Keep a Secret, was released in July.
 
 
BEST NON-FICTION BOOK 
 
The Schoolgirl , Her Teacher and His Wife by Rebecca Hazel
Vintage Press

Justice and the voices of women were at the heart of Rebecca Hazel’s Non-Fiction winner –The Schoolgirl, Her Teacher and His Wife. The judges reported, “This book focuses on ‘The Schoolgirl’ JC and Lynette Simms, the victims of Chris Dawson, now convicted of the murder of his first wife Lynn. Without Hazel’s curiosity and groundwork – conversations with JC when they worked together at a women’s refuge – Dawson would never have come to account for his crimes.

 Rebecca Hazel spent more than a decade researching this compelling case. She hit roadblock after roadblock, yet never gave up."


DEBUT AWARD

The Half Brother by Christine Keighery
Ultimo Press

The prospect of turning 60 prompted Christine Keighery (who also writes as Chrissie Perry) to try her hand at an adult novel. She is the author of more than thirty-five novels for children and Young Adults, including 13 books in the hugely successful Go Girl! Series. Her work has been published in ten countries, including the US, UK, Spain, Brazil, Slovenia, and Korea.
 
 The judges described The Half Brother as “a gripping story set in modern Australia, full of psychological suspense, gaslighting, new developments, and a well-handled final section that we didn’t see coming. The quality of her characters, the joys of her twisting plot, her control of pacing and pay-off merited this award.”
 
 
 BEST CHILDREN"S NOVEL
 
Boris in Switzerland by Lucinda Gifford
Walker Books Australia

The judges were thoroughly entertained and impressed by Lucinda Gifford’s children’s book, Boris in Switzerland, “an original take on the traditional boarding school mystery with the addition of an endearing family of anthropomorphic wolves. With witty, expressive illustrations on almost every page, it is jam-packed with the talent, passion, and esteem for readership of author-illustrator Lucinda Gifford."

Gifford said that as a life-long lover of mysteries and elaborate literary twists, she had been plotting for years to ‘move into crime’.
 
 
READER'S CHOICE AWARD
 
The Benevolent Society of Ill-Mannered Ladies by Alison Goodman
 

 

Alison Goodman is the author of eight novels including her latest release The Benevolent Society of Ill-Mannered Ladies which was a Washington Post and an Amazon Best Mystery Book of 2023. Set in the Regency era, its sleuths are two clever older women solving crimes by using skills and knowledge they have developed through their lives.

 “Lady Gus and Lady Julia were born from my own desire to read stories about older women having adventures,” Goodman said. “For me, this is a particularly sweet win — voted by readers from the Sisters in Crime membership. You, the readers, are why we plot and write and rewrite. You are why we strive to create the delight, whether that delight be the comfort of a cosy crime or the terror of a thriller or the fascination of a police procedural.” 
 

The 2024 Davitt Awards were again supported by the Swinburne University of Technology

The Davitts are named after Ellen Davitt, the author of Australia’s first mystery novel, Force and Fraud, in 1865. The awards are handsome wooden trophies featuring the front cover of the winning novel under perspex. No prize money is attached.